Father: Robert DUDLEY III Mother: Jane MARLOW |
_Robert DUDLEY I_____+ | (1647 - 1701) m 1690 _Robert DUDLEY II____| | (1691 - 1745) m 1714| | |_Elizabeth RANSOM ___+ | (1650 - 1718) m 1690 _Robert DUDLEY III___| | (1718 - ....) | | | _James CURTIS _______ | | | (1663 - 1721) | |_Elizabeth CURTIS ___| | (1695 - ....) m 1714| | |_____________________ | | |--Louis DUDLEY | (1734 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Jane MARLOW ________| (1715 - ....) | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Narcissa Mildred BLOODWORTH |
_Henry GAINES ____________+ | (1737 - 1830) m 1756 _Henry Mayo GAINES ____| | (1769 - 1833) m 1797 | | |_Ann (Martha Ann) GEORGE _+ | (1735 - 1801) m 1756 _Ira Mayo GAINES _____________| | (1801 - 1861) m 1845 | | | _Richard F. FEATHERSTONE _+ | | | (1738 - 1800) m 1776 | |_Susanna FEATHERSTONE _| | (1777 - 1850) m 1797 | | |_Susanna__________________ | (1750 - ....) m 1776 | |--Ruth J. GAINES | (1849 - ....) | __________________________ | | | _______________________| | | | | | |__________________________ | | |_Narcissa Mildred BLOODWORTH _| (1828 - 1902) m 1845 | | __________________________ | | |_______________________| | |__________________________
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Mother: Elizabeth LEWIS |
_Thomas I (HOLLIDAY\HALLIDAY) HOLLADAY _ | (1648 - 1701) m 1670 _John Marshall HOLLADAY II_| | (1676 - 1742) | | |_Elizabeth SEVILLE _____________________ | (1650 - ....) m 1670 _Joseph HOLLADAY I___| | (1726 - 1795) m 1747| | | ________________________________________ | | | | |_Ann Elizabeth LEWIS ______| | (1688 - ....) | | |________________________________________ | | |--John HOLLADAY | (1749 - 1819) | ________________________________________ | | | _Henry or Harry LEWIS _____| | | (1700 - ....) | | | |________________________________________ | | |_Elizabeth LEWIS ____| (1727 - 1795) m 1747| | ________________________________________ | | |___________________________| | |________________________________________
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Nancy Hart, after killing a man and wounding another, holds the
remaining Tories at gun point until they could be hanged. In
reading many stories about Nancy Hart, her "dislike" of the
Tories, and the continuous attempts on both sides to "get the
better " of the other, the climax of her life must have been the
capture of the Tories who had "savagely murdered" Colonel John
Dooley, a fellow Patriot. Nancy Hart is said to have sung,
"Yankee Doodle" as she watched them die, fulfilling her vow to
avenge their deed.
. . .
. . was a real person! She is one of many women recognized by
the Daughters of the American Revolution as a Patriot during the
American Revolutionary War. Nancy and her family have had many
tributes paid to them. Hart County Georgia was created from
Franklin and Elbert in 1853. A correspondent of the Savannah
Morning News said that it was called Hart County ... "to
perpetuate the memory of that 'Honey of a patriot' mentioned in
George White's Statistics, under the name of Nancy Hart, and a
fit tribute for such a brave hearted woman." Nancy's daughter
Sukey Hart, was a patriot in the Revolutionary War. Sukey Hart
helped by carrying her mother's messages to the local
Revolutionary militia. The Sukey Hart Chapter, DAR was organized
on October 7, 1982, in Warner Robins, Georgia. The Nancy Hart
Highway was named by the Georgia Daughters of the American
Revolution, and marker erected by the John Benson Chapter, DAR,
Hartwell, Georgia March, 1928. The General Samuel Hopkins
Chapter, DAR of Henderson County, Kentucky, in 1930 honored
Nancy Morgan Hart with a monument. These are just a few of many!
{See Nancy Hart HWY}
Nancy Morgan Hart was born Anne MORGAN, circa 1744 or 1747,
possibly in Orange County, North Carolina. Her parentage has not
positively been proven. Traditionally and many records have
claimed her father and mother were Thomas and Rebecca Alexander
Morgan. However, more recent evidence strongly indicates the
possibility that her parents were actually Mark Morgan and
Sarah.
Nancy married Benjamin Hart, born in Hanover Co., Virginia, who
moved with his family to Caswell County after 1755. Benjamin and
Nancy had at least eight children. It is thought that the Harts
moved to Edgefield District, South Carolina and then settled on
the Broad River between where Elbert and Wilkes Georgia Counties
are today around 1771. They were residing there in Wilkes County
when the Revolutionary War erupted. It is believed that
Benjamin, Nancy with possibly three of their sons, Morgan, John,
and Thomas, participated in the Battle of Kettle Creek, February
14, 1779. After the war they moved to Brunswick, Glynn County,
Georgia.{Cabin}
After Benjamin's death around the turn of the century, Nancy
moved to Clarke County Georgia, where her son John lived, and
about 1802/03 they moved to Henderson County, Kentucky where
Nancy remained until her death, reportedly at the age of
93.{Grave Site}
Some say Nancy was a firebrand. It's been said of Nancy that she
stood six feet tall, had flaming red hair, and apparently was
quite a marksman with her musket. The neighboring Indians called
her "Wahatchee", meaning "War Woman" out of the healthy respect
and fear they had for her.
Some controversy has existed in the past as to whether or not
Nancy Hart was a real person, or a figment of someone's
over-active imagination. A minor Georgia historian, Rev. G. G.
Smith, wrote in The Macon Journal in the early part of this
century that ...
"This is a story of fiction. There was no such person as Nancy
Hart in real life. It is just a pretty story that was written by
a clever writer, and it made such a hit that the character of
Nancy Hart has been given a place in history."{Read Article}
Descendants and friends of Nancy Hart immediately came to her
rescue, offering irrefutable documentation and personal
knowledge of the woman, proving beyond any doubt that Nancy was
indeed a real person. One "miffed" supporter from Hart County,
Georgia wrote in the Hartwell Sun:
"The Nancy Hart Episode is assuming national importance, as
Kentuckians have come forward and told us of Nancy's life, death
and burial place in that state. It has been proved beyond a
reasonable doubt that Nancy not only lived in Elbert County, but
that she did very near everything that tradition gives her
credit for. It is sure that the Rev. Geo. Smith is asking for
mercy from the attacks on him for saying that Nancy was a
myth."{Read Article}
Sometimes, though, it has been difficult to separate the fact
from the myth, as it has been the tendency of her admirers to
embellish the details of her accomplishments to the point where
they took on Amazonian proportions. Even here with this web site
I have been asked by some visitors, "Was this woman a real
person?"
One of the first printed stories about Nancy Hart appeared in
the Milledgeville Southern Recorder in 1825 as follows:
"One day six Tories paid Nancy a call and demanded a meal. She
soon spread before them smoking venison, hoe-cakes, and fresh
honeycomb. Having stacked their arms, they seated themselves,
and started to eat, when Nancy quick as a flash seized one of
the guns, cocked it, and with a blazing oath declared she would
blow out the brains of the first mortal that offered to rise or
taste a mouthful! She sent one of her sons to inform the Whigs
of her prisoners. Whether uncertain because of her cross-eyes
which one she was aiming at, or transfixed by her ferocity, they
remained quiet. The Whigs soon arrived and dealt with the Tories
according to the rules of the times."
According to Pam Wilson in The Hart of Georgia, ...."several
years later the same story appeared in Godey's Lady's Book with
a few changes. In this account five Tories paid a visit to their
old acquaintance, Aunt Nancy. After entering her cabin, they
asked if it was true she had helped a Whig rebel escape from the
King's men. Nancy boldly admitted to doing so and proceeded to
tell them how. She had allowed the Whig to ride through the open
doors of her house into the swamp beyond. She laughed at how the
King's men had been so easily fooled. Out of irritation the five
Tories shot her turkey and demanded that she cook it for then.
Nancy sent her daughter, Sukey to the spring to bring water, and
more importantly blow the conch-shell to summon Benjamin and the
neighbors. Mellowed by the liquor they drank as they waited on
their meal, the Tories stacked their guns. While they ate, Nancy
passed their guns through a chink in the wall. When they
discovered what she was doing they jumped to their feet. Nancy
brought the gun she had to her shoulder and threatened to kill
the first one who moved. One made a move toward her and was
promptly shot dead. When the men arrived, the other four were
hanged from a nearby tree.
In later years this story was called into question. However, in
1912 when the Elberton and Eastern Railroad was being
constructed, workmen unearthed a grave which contained the six
human skeletons. This discovery tended to settle the question of
Nancy Hart's encounter with the Tories. "{Read Article}
The Georgia Whigs used Nancy as a spy several times. One time
she dressed as a man and entered the British camp, pretending to
be crazy, and was able to come away with vital information on
the British troop movements. Another time the Georgia Whigs
badly needed information about what was going on the Carolina
side of the Savannah River. As there were no volunteers for the
mission, Nancy tied a few logs together with grapevines, crossed
the river and obtained the needed information.
Loula Kendall Rogers says, "Many Tories lived on the other side
of the river, opposite her cabin. The stories of her capturing a
large number at her own table and throwing hot, boiling soap
into the face of one who was peeping at her are true." She
further states that, "there was a large oaken stump near her
home in which she cut a notch for her gun. Concealing herself in
the undergrowth around, she watched for Tories as they crossed
the river, and without compunction shot them down, and blew the
conch shell for her husband to deliver their bodies over to the
proper authorities."{Read Article}"
Georgians and Kentuckians alike can be proud to call Nancy Hart
their own.
RESOURCES CONTRIBUTED BY BARB JOHNSON
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Meadows/6651/
__ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) MORGAN _| | | | |__ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) MORGAN of VA NC TN KY_| | | | | __ | | | | |__________________________| | | | |__ | | |--Nancy (Anne) MORGAN | (1744 - 1840) | __ | | | __________________________| | | | | | |__ | | |________________________________________| | | __ | | |__________________________| | |__
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" Recorded May 25, 1727 at the request of Francis Wine: May 3,
1727, John Lowe and his wife, Mary, of Prince George's County,
MD to Francis Wine; several tracts of land on each side of Port
Tobacco Fresh, in all 330 acres, as given by Henry Hawkins, late
of Charles County, to Mary Hawkins, his natural daughter and now
Mary Lowe, wife of John Lowe.
(Charles County Land Records, Book L#2. p. 355)
The above is recorded; however, did someone add "At the request
of Francis Wine"? Francis Wine died in 1682. Or was there a 45
year delay in getting this in the books? I have three sons for
Francis Wine: Henry, Elizabeth & John. Did I miss one who was
perhaps Francis II? Ann
__ | _Francis WYNNE WINE "the Immigrant"_| | (1645 - 1681) m 1670 | | |__ | _Henry WYNNE WINE ___| | (1672 - ....) | | | __ | | | | |_Elizabeth HOLLAND? ________________| | (1658 - 1717) m 1670 | | |__ | | |--Francis WYNNE | (1706 - ....) | __ | | | ____________________________________| | | | | | |__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | |____________________________________| | |__
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